Trumpology

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By Victor Davis Hanson

Donald Trump has signaled he will announce his presidential intentions after the November midterm elections. Yet his record of endorsements is quite mixed. By the sheer numbers of winning primary candidates his stamp of approval is impressive, but in a few of the most important races, not so much.
 
The disaster that is the Biden Administration has been a godsend for Trump. Had Biden simply plagiarized the successful Trump agenda, there would have followed no border disaster, no energy crisis, no hyperinflation, and no disastrous flight from Afghanistan.
 
Had Biden followed through on his “unity” rhetoric, he could have lorded over Trump’s successful record as his own, while contrasting his Uncle-Joe ecumenicalism with supposed Trump’s polarization.
 
Of course, serious people knew from the start that was utterly impossible. A cognitively challenged Biden was a captive of ideologues. Thus, he was bound to pursue an extremist agenda that could only end as it now has—in disaster and record low polls.
 
Still, how ironic that the Biden catastrophe revived a Trump candidacy. Biden likely will cause the Democrats to lose Congress. His pick of a dismal Kamala Harris as vice president has likely ensured, for now, fewer viable Democratic presidential candidates in 2024.
 
So, will Trump run?
 
Some logic might dictate that Trump not try a second campaign. He would be 79. The recent record of doddering septuagenarian and octogenarian politicians—Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Dianne Feinstein—has warned Americans that one’s late 70s certainly are not, as the Baby Boomer generation may try to hype, the “new 50s.”
 
In addition, Trump’s old and new business ventures would take further and greater hits.
 
His family would again be targeted and unfairly maligned.
 
An otherwise nihilist progressive and media agenda would reawaken solely to destroy Donald Trump—not his policies against which the Left has offered nothing of substance.
 
The Trump MAGA legacy is now largely institutionalized.
 
All Republican candidates will run on secure borders, energy independence, deregulation, Jacksonian foreign policy, a populist, middle-class, nationalism, and deterrence against China—albeit with much-needed new emphasis on destructive deficit spending.
 
Candidates like Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and U.S. Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) are all close with or have worked for Trump and would, more or less, carry though the Trump agenda.
 
The Trump record itself between 2017 and 2021 would be assessed more positively, especially in comparison to what preceded and followed it, and with Trump in retirement.
 
On the other hand, in 2016 the Republican field was also hailed as a dream team. Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker was acclaimed as the hands-on pro who ran a purple state, battling successfully public-employee unions and left-wing monied special interests.
 
We know how that field ended.
 
Trump supporters would counter that a wiser Trump would hit the ground running. He would likely not recruit disloyal outliers or Republican Party apparatchiks.
 
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Much less would he trust the ossified hierarchy of the FBI, CIA, DIA, CDC, NIH, or any of the other alphabetic, deep-state soups.
 
The Trump base would add that a non-Trump Trump candidate would never endure, much less brawl against, left-wing madness. They would claim that avoiding cul-de-sac spats while doubling down on the Trump agenda sounds nice—in the fashion that, theoretically, there could be sunshine without the sun.
 
In the end, none of the above considerations will likely matter.
 
Instead, the outcome of the midterms will tell a lot. A clear but not overwhelming Republican win will likely discourage Trump and empower his critics.
 
But a historic blowout will spur Trump. In the end, even if most Republicans would prefer he not run, they will likely vote for him over the hard-left alternative.
 
As for the Democratic landscape, it will not be the case that Joe Biden may choose to run. He will not run because the decision will not be his.
 
Even if he manages to last another two years in office, Democratic grandees know his cognitive faculties are eroding rapidly. They read polls and know what his non compos mentis optics have done to their party.

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Twenty-Nine Republicans Back Resolution To Expunge Trump’s Second Impeachment

They should expunge both

My concern is that the deep state/Democrats will go full JFK on Trump if he keeps going.

Twenty-nine out of 210? There are probably more Republicans in the House secretly wishing he’d be struck by lightning on the 9th hole.

Preview of coming attractions: Denver Riggleman on Meadow’s yet-to-be-revealed text messages.

“What we can see is absolutely damning.”

Fake news
Speculation
You are desperate

There was nothing “fake” about Trump’s failed coup attempt. The Capitol was invaded. People died.

FBI false flag operation
The people who died were killed by the government

Last edited 1 year ago by TrumpWon

Does joe not know how to fix the inflation problem he manufactured?

06/02/22 – Republicans who texted Meadows with urgent pleas on January 6 say Trump could have stopped the violence

Within minutes of the US Capitol breach on January 6, 2021, messages began pouring into the cell phone of White House chief of staff Mark Meadows. Among those texting were Republican members of Congress, former members of the Trump administration, GOP activists, Fox personalities — even the President’s son. Their texts all carried the same urgent plea: President Donald Trump needed to immediately denounce the violence and tell the mob to go home.

“He’s got to condem (sic) this shit. Asap,” Donald Trump Jr. texted at 2:53 p.m.

“POTUS needs to calm this shit down,” GOP Rep. Jeff Duncan of South Carolina wrote at 3:04 p.m.

“TELL THEM TO GO HOME !!!” former White House chief of staff Reince Priebus messaged at 3:09 p.m.

“POTUS should go on air and defuse this. Extremely important,” Tom Price, former Trump health and human services secretary and a former GOP representative from Georgia, texted at 3:13 p.m.

“Fix this now,” wrote GOP Rep. Chip Roy of Texas at 3:15 p.m…

Speculation

No, just bullshit.

Trump sent out a Tweet to tell everyone to go home. As soon as Twitter saw it, they blocked it as it might interfere with the Democrat operation.

“What we can see is absolutely damning.”

Wow. Yet another “bombshell”. Yawn.

Arguing that the media would tear into Trump if he were to run ignores the fact that they will tear into anyone that runs against whatever candidate the DNC tells their lemmings they want this time. So, that part is a wash.

I would like to think someone like DeSantis would carry on the policies of Trump with the determination of Trump. Idiot Biden might make that a lot easier for anyone, assuring the destruction of their majorities in a big way. A nice Republican majority might make anyone a Trump, but it has to be someone that will not squander the opportunity.

Not that their hypocrisy wouldn’t override, the Democrats have pretty much destroyed their “old white guy” argument against old white guys. Let’s just rule out demented old white guys.

Trump was far superior to Obama, but there is no argument he is far and above in a completely different class than idiot Biden. His regime of incompetents have an unsurpassed record of failure. There is nowhere to go but WAAAAY up… unless another Democrat is installed.